Total=land+water; Land=land only

Dyer Brook Community Church (2003) @

[DIYER BROOK] is a town in Aroostook County, organized as a plantation for election purposes as early as September 6, 1858. After several addition “organizations,” it was incorporated as a town on March 21, 1891.

The first settlement was in 1844 when Orrin Laughton same from Smyrna and built a log house. By 1880 the plantation had 40 voters.

Old Barn in Dyer Brook on Route 2 (2003)

Dyer Brook, so named for the stream that flows through it and into the Mattawamkeag River, is in the heart of potato country. Under economic pressure as are many northern Aroostook towns, it lost 18 percent of its population in the decade 1990-2000, though it regained about 6 percent by 2010.

U.S. Rt. 2 in Dyer Brook (2012)

U.S. Route 2, in its eastern area, is the main road through the town and the only village, with Townline Road defining its northern boundary. Few paved roads exist elsewhere.

Interstate 95 slices through just to the west of Route 2, but with no interchanges in the township. A rail line is sandwiched between the two roads on its way north to Oakfield.